Download - Grading Practices for Secondary Schools
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2014 New Mexico Assessment Conference
Assessment Best Practices to Drive Instruction
Tom Hierck@thierck
Grading Practices for Secondary Schools
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Outcomes/Objectives
Participants will:
- recognize the need to critically examine established grading practices;- appreciate the complexity of grading;- identify the purposes of grading;- analyze the value of guidelines for grading; and- consider implications of standards-based grading for reporting student achievement.
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What are the main purposes of grading?
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Purposes for Grading• Communicate the achievement status of students to parents, (students), and others.• Provide information that students can use for self-evaluation.• Select, identify, or group students for certain educational paths or programs.• Provide incentives to learn.• Evaluate the effectiveness of instructional programs Guskey, Thomas R. (Editor), Communicating Student Learning: The 1996 ASCD Yearbook, ASCD, Alexandria, VA, 1996, 17
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“Grades are not inherently bad.
It is their misuse and
misinterpretation that is bad.”
Guskey (1993)
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Developments That Make Change in Grading Systems Imperative
The growing emphasis on standards and performance assessments makes current practices inadequate
Parents and community members are demanding more and better information about student learning progress
Advances in technology allow for more efficient reporting of detailed information on student learning
There is growing awareness of the gap between our knowledge base and common practice in grading
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What are report card grades based upon . . .
. . . in a typical classroom?
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Typical Grading Practice Sources
Policies and practices experienced as students Personal philosophies of teaching and learning District-, building-, department-, or grade-level
policies on grading and reporting What was learned about grading and reporting in
undergraduate and teacher preparation programs
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Typical Sources of Grading Evidence
Homework Completion
Homework Quality Class Participation Work Habits and
Neatness Effort
Attendance Punctuality of
Assignments Class Behavior or
Attitude Progress Made
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Typical Sources of Grading Evidence
Major Exams or Compositions
Class Quizzes Reports or Projects Student Portfolios
Laboratory Projects Students’ Notebooks or
Journals Classroom Observations Oral Presentations Exhibits of Students’
Work
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Grades are Communicated to…
In the elementary grades…
· Parents· Students· Other teachers· Administrators
In middle and high school…
· College admissions office
· Scholarship decision makers
· Potential employers· Juvenile authorities· Insurance
companies
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Pause + Ponder
Should grading be based
on "growth over time"?
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“the primary purpose of . . . grades . . . (is) to communicate student achievement
to students, parents, school administrators, post-secondary institutions and employers.“
Bailey, J. and McTighe, J., “Reporting Achievement at the Secondary School Level: What and How?”, in Thomas R. Guskey, (Ed.) Communicating Student Learning: ASCD Yearbook 1996, ASCD, Alexandria, VA, 1996, 120
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Reflecting on Your Grading Practices
• What are the principles on which your grading practices are based?
• What were or are the main influences on your grading principles and practices?
• How do your grading principles and practices compare with those of other teachers in your school?
• Do the grades awarded fairly reflect the results from which they were derived for each student?
• If you answered "yes," for which students? Why?• If you answered "no," for which students? Why?
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What do “grades" mean?Take a few minutes and write several Descriptors (point form or sentences) that clearly describe what an A (or 4 or whatever symbol is top of your grading scale) means in your grading scheme. (The word or symbol for per cent MUST NOT appear in your description.)
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Questions for Establishing Appropriate Grading Practices
Is it appropriate to factor the student's ...achievement ...intelligence
...level of effort or
...level of attitude
when assigning a grade?
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If all of these are factored into a grade, all with different weights, how can we expect the reader
to factor all of those things out and understand what we meant?
If you think it’s possible,
you are living in a dream world.
-Stiggins
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Pause + Ponder
When is grading
counterproductive?
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Where Do You Stand? If a student gets a 100% on a pre-test, he should NOT have to
do any assignments in the unit of study, and instead, he should do a personal research project related to the general topic of the unit while other students learn the original material. He gets an automatic “A” on the final unit test.
Danika is borderline between a C and a B grade. In order to choose one or the other for the final report card grade, it’s appropriate for her teacher to consider Danika’s outstanding attitude, behavior, and high homework completion rate when determining whether to record the C or the B on the report card.
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Unidimensionality – A single score on a test represents a single dimension or trait that has been assessed
StudentDimension
ADimension
B Total Score
1 2 10 12
2 10 2 12
3 6 6 12
Problem: Most tests use a single score to assess multiple dimensions and traits. The resulting score is often invalid and useless. -- Marzano,
Classroom Assessment and Grading That Work, page 13
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“No studies support the use of low grades or marks as punishments. Instead of prompting greater effort, low grades more often cause students to withdraw from learning.” Guskey and Bailey, Developing Grading and Reporting Systems for Student Learning, Corwin Press, 2001, 34-35
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“There is no reward in punishment.”
Barth, R., Lessons Learned
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Adapted from Guskey and Bailey, Developing Grading and Reporting Systems for Student Learning, Corwin, 2001, 139
Three practices that deserve attention (because of) their potentially harmful effects are:
1. averaging scores to determine a grade;2. the use of zeros; and3. taking credit away from students or
lowering their grade because of behavioral infractions.
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“Averaging falls far short of providing an accurate description of what students have learned. . . . If the purpose of grading and
reporting is to provide an accurate description of what students have learned,
then averaging must be considered inadequate and inappropriate”.
Guskey, Thomas R. (Editor), Communicating Student Learning: The 1996 ASCD Yearbook, ASCD, Alexandria, VA, 1996, 21
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“Assigning a score of zero to work that is late, missed, or neglected does not
accurately depict students’ learning. Is the teacher certain the student has learned absolutely nothing, or is the zero assigned
to punish students for not displaying appropriate responsibility?”
Guskey, Thomas R. (Editor), Communicating Student Learning: The 1996 ASCD Yearbook, ASCD, Alexandria, VA, 1996, 21
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“In effective schools one of the most consistent practices of successful teachers is the provision of multiple opportunities to learn.The consequence for a student who fails to meet a standard is not a low grade but rather the opportunity, indeed the requirement to resubmit his or her work.”
Reeves, D., “Standards are Not Enough: Essential Transformations for School Success,” NASSP Bulletin, Dec. 2000, 11
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If we do not allow students to re-do work, we deny the growth mindset so vital to student
maturation, and we are declaring to the student:
This assignment had no legitimate educational value.
It’s okay if you don’t do this work. It’s okay if you don’t learn this content or skill.
None of these is acceptable to the highly accomplished, professional educator.
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The Effect of Zero
Mean calculated with 50% instead of 0 = 78.8%
Student A
8686860
86
Mean = 68.8%Does this accurately reflect what the student knows and can do?
Median = 86%Mode = 86%
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Imagine the Reverse…
A = 100 –40
B = 39 – 30C = 29 – 20D = 19 – 10F = 9 – 0
What if we reversed the proportional influences of the grades? That “A” would have a huge, yet undue, inflationary effect on the overall grade.
Just as we wouldn‘t want an “A” to have an inaccurate effect, we don’t want an “F” grade to have such an undue, deflationary, & inaccurate effect. Keeping zeroes on a 100-pt. scale is just as absurd as the scale seen here.
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Time to Change the Old Paradigm:
Grades are NOT compensation.
Grades are communication:
They are an accurate report
of what happened.
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Tom Hierck@thierckthierck
@gmail.comThanks for the gift
of your time!